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Electoral College By: Arjun Karthikeyan, Branden Katona, John Crenshaw, and Ajay Sundar
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Winner Take-All Feature The candidate who gets the most voters wins all of a state’s electoral votes ◦The candidate can win a majority, a plurality, or just more than any other candidate 48 states use the winner-take-all system Nebraska and Maine do not use the winner-take-all system ◦They use votes based on the both the state’s popular vote and the votes of each Congressional District
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Effect on Presidential Campaigns Choice of Vice Presidential Candidate ◦Create a regional balance on the ticket ◦Must appeal to the whole country in order to win enough electoral votes and a regional balance can create this ◦In a popular vote, candidates would only need to appeal to large population centers ◦Example: JFK’s selection of LBJ JFK from Mass., while LBJ from Texas Able to pull New England and Southern states
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Effect on third party candidates Hinders third party candidates at the state level Third party candidates only get electoral votes if they have the majority in a state, no matter how many popular votes they get This causes a chain effect: the inability to get electoral votes decreases the amount of funds the third party candidates can then raise, effectively eliminating them from the race
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Why hasn’t it been abolished? One reason it has not been abolished is that it favors the two party system ◦It helps the stability of the nation ◦Third party candidates have difficulty winning enough votes to have a chance of winning the election Racial minorities and interest groups are in favor of the electoral college because it protects their votes ◦Even a small number of voters can make a difference on whether or not a political candidate wins all the electoral votes for a state
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